It works great for single cards though.Īnother issue is that the chassis was not optimized to be easy to be upgraded later on, they provide detailed steps and if you take a look it's so nice: I have an Aurora R11 and from what I read it's not what you are looking for, it's just too small for that much power/heat properly. Now I’ll have the same CPU but I’ll go for a single 2080Ti.Imma be gaming, streaming, programming, 3D modelling and video editing on the PC, hence the Ram But I want a high end overkill PC which is why I’m going for the 10900K and the 2 2080Tis. Thanks a lot everyone for the wonderful advice. And you get to put them all together yourself and keep all the cool boxes, isn't that a bonus? ![]() By the time we get Zen 3 and Ampere and RDNA2, I think you should be able to find a lot more parts in stock to build your own system, so you know that you get an actually good PSU, and an actually good motherboard, and an actually good memory kit, et cetera, all of these being common components to cheap out on in prebuilts. If this is a gaming setup you're looking for, swap the 10900K for a 10600K (or 10700K if i5 or Ryzen don't sound good enough), the 2080Ti for a 2080S, and the 64GB of RAM for 16/32GB.īut still, I'd just build it myself. ![]() If I was spending that much money on a system, I better be building it myself lol, but that's just me I guess.
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